Stephanie Brill is a licensed clinical social worker (LCSW) in private practice in Oklahoma City who provides individual and couples therapy, with a clinical specialization in gender identity, sexual orientation, and family dynamics around LGBTQ+ issues.
Brill holds licensure as a clinical social worker under Oklahoma's Department of Health, bringing 15+ years of experience in mental health. She works with adolescents and adults in one-on-one therapy and couples sessions. Her training emphasizes affirmative therapy frameworks, meaning her approach explicitly affirms rather than pathologizes sexual orientation and gender identity. She integrates cognitive-behavioral and emotionally focused therapy techniques, and her practice is shaped by her published work on transgender identity in family systems.
In Oklahoma City's broader mental health landscape, individual LCSW providers are less common than large group practices or hospital-affiliated clinics. The Oklahoma Psychological Association and state licensing board maintain registries; providers in private practice like Brill offer continuity of care and longer appointment slots than clinical settings that operate on 20-30 minute schedules.
Brill provides 50-minute sessions for individual therapy and 60-minute sessions for couples work. Her sliding-scale fee structure ranges from $70 to $130 per session, depending on client income and circumstances. She accepts some insurance plans; clients should call to verify in-network status with their specific carrier, as mental health coverage varies widely among Oklahoma employers and plans.
She does not prescribe medication; psychiatric care requires a psychiatrist or psychiatric nurse practitioner elsewhere. Likewise, she does not conduct formal psychological testing or IQ assessments. Her scope is talk therapy and relational work.
Oklahoma City is served by several large group practices including Therapeutic Counseling Services (multiple locations, mostly insurance-based, 15-20 minute first appointments) and clinicians affiliated with OU Medicine behavioral health. Compared to these larger settings, Brill works solo, which means consistent therapist-client continuity and longer sessions but potentially longer wait times (typical appointment availability 1-3 weeks out). Group practices often fill slots more quickly and may have after-hours availability; Brill's schedule is more limited.
For LGBTQ+-focused therapy specifically, Oklahoma City has a smaller pool than large metro areas. The Trevor Project maintains a searchable directory of affirming therapists, and Brill is among a handful of LCSW and LMFT providers in Oklahoma with explicit trans and gender-identity specialization. Clients with specific needs around sexual orientation or gender exploration often need to travel to Dallas or Kansas City if they want confirmed specialists; Brill eliminates that travel.
Insurance-reliant clients may find group practices faster, but those prioritizing consistency with a single provider and longer appointment time typically prefer private practitioners.
Brill works well for adults and adolescents seeking individual therapy around identity exploration, family relationships, anxiety, or grief, and for couples navigating communication or life transitions. Her focus on LGBTQ+ contexts makes her a natural fit for clients whose identity is central to their therapeutic goals, though she works with all clients regardless of orientation.
She is not a fit for clients needing medication management (psychiatry or psychiatric nurse practitioner required), active crisis intervention (emergency services required), or clients unable to commit to a private-pay sliding scale. Those with robust employer-based insurance coverage and no identity-specific needs may find faster appointment availability through larger group practices.
Initial calls are typically 20-30 minutes, during which Brill and the prospective client discuss presenting concerns, her approach, fee structure, and scheduling. She does not charge for this call. If both parties agree to move forward, the first full session is a 50-minute intake: history-taking, goal-setting, and basic risk assessment. Client notes are stored securely under HIPAA protections; she operates independently and does not share records with other practices unless written consent is given.
Most clients see improvement or clarity within 6-12 sessions; longer-term work is common for ongoing support or couples therapy. Brill typically works with clients at a weekly or biweekly cadence.
Brill's office is located in central Oklahoma City. She operates by appointment only (no drop-in). Hours are generally weekday mornings and early evenings, with limited weekend availability; confirmation of current schedule is required by phone or email. Free street parking is available near her office; metered lots are not used. She does not have a waiting room; most clients do not arrive more than 5 minutes early.
Stephanie Brill fills a gap in Oklahoma City's mental health landscape by offering long-session continuity and LGBTQ+-affirmative practice in a private setting, a combination not widely available in the metro area.
